Iowa Department of Agriculture bee researcher Andrew Joseph characterized the situation as a “death by a thousand paper cuts” as the honey bee population has faced an environment lacking in diversity, pesticide problems, colony collapse and parasites such as varroa mites, since the 1990s. […]

“It’s not that bees can’t handle a cold winter or snow … (but) when you go into winter with those types of bees and then you’re confronted with the harshness of this season, they don’t make it through to spring time,” Joseph said.

Dave Irvin, President of the East Central Iowa Beekeepers, echoed these points, and told Common Dreams his association reported losses as high as 80 percent — a range “way out” of what normally happens.

The cold is part of it, Irvin said, but it also has to do with the diseases bees and chemicals bees are confronting.

To help beekeepers now facing these expensive losses, he urges people to buy more bees, and to be aware of the chemical assault they may be waging on their lawns and crops.
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